Git provides a great support while debugging your code. This tutorial shows you how it works.
Scenario
Find the first broken git commit.
Scenario in Details
However, the main purpose of git is version control, it can also be useful for debugging.
You found a bug in the system, your first two questions are of course: who did it and when?
Let git help you to figure it out in a fast way.
Detailed Description of the Solution
Case 1 - Manual Verification of Commits
If you don’t have an automated way to verify if a commit contains the bug or not, then follow case 1.
The solution will be git bisect. You can enter bisect mode with the command git bisect start.
Then you have to mark your current commit bad, as it contains the bug. Type the git bisect bad command. As the next step, you have to mark the last known good commit, so a commit where the bug was still not present. For that, you may have to try out several commits. But if you remember that it was still working 2 days ago, then just pick a commit from that day. You can checkout each commit to test. Once you found a good commit, use the command git bisect good hash_of_the_good_commit. If the current head is the good commit, you can skip the hash from the end of the command.
Now git bisect will checkout some commits. Determine for each if they contain the bug or not and mark them with git bisect good or git bisect bad. After several steps, Git bisect will tell you the first good commit. If you think you made a mistake, you can restart the bisect process anytime, just type git bisect reset.
Case 2 - Automated Verification of Commits
You can make this process faster if you have a script or any executable which can determine if the bug is present or not. You can even use a test framework. The point is only that the executable shall return 0 if the bug is not present and anything else if the bug is present.
Similarly to case 1, enter bisect mode with the command git bisect start.
Then you have to mark your current commit bad, as it contains the bug. Type the git bisect bad command. As the next step, you have to mark the last known good commit, so a commit where the bug was still not present.
Once you marked one good and one bad commit, just use the command git bisect run path_to_your_executable. Here, the executable is either a standalone script, but it can be even a call to your test framework with some parameters.
After this step, git bisect shows you the first bad commit.
Step by Step Guideline
Case 1 - Manual Verification of Commits
- Type git bisect start - It starts the bisect process
- Type git bisect bad - It marks the current commit as “bad”
- Type git bisect good
hash_of_last_working_commit
- Mark “good” the last commit where you are sure the bug was not present - Now git bisect will checkout a commit which is between the current and the last good commit. Compile it and test it. If the bug is present type git bisect bad, otherwise git bisect good.
- Repeat step 4 until you can’t find the commit
Case 2 - Automated Verification of Commits
- Implement a test which returns 0, if the bug is not present and non zero if the bug is present (most of the test frameworks already works in this way, so it is enough to implement some simple unit test in most of the cases)
- Type git bisect start
- Type git bisect bad
- Type git bisect good
hash_of_last_working_commit
- Type git bisect run
your_test
Test Your Knowledge
You can test your knowledge here:
Additional Git Material
You can find more useful information related to git in the following ebook:
History
- 7th May, 2021: Initial version